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Assessing & Mitigating Surface Fault Rupture Deformation

Assessing & Mitigating Surface Fault Rupture Deformation

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Assessing & Mitigating Surface Fault Rupture Deformation

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  1. Assessing & Mitigating Surface Fault Rupture Deformation Jonathan D. Bray, Ph.D., P.E., NAE Faculty Chair in Earthquake Engineering Excellence UC Berkeley Sponsored in part by the National Science Foundation

  2. Characteristics and Effects of Surface Rupture Depend on: • fault type • inclination of fault plane • amount of fault displacement • fault definition • overlying earth material • structure and its foundation

  3. Broad Area of Building Damage on Hanging Wall of Reverse Fault Not on footwall 1999 Chi-Chi EQ Hanging Wall Reverse Fault Experiment (Davies et al. 2007)

  4. Broad Area of Building Damage on Hanging Wall of Normal Fault Not on footwall 1999 Kocaeli EQ Hanging Wall

  5. Distributed Ground Movement: 2010 Darfield Earthquake Van Dissen et al. 2013 • 50% of horz. displ. occurred over 40% of width of deformed zone with offset on discrete shears accounting for < 33% of total displ. • Horz. displ. of 1 m required before ground cracks observed

  6. Distributed Ground Movement: 2010 Darfield Earthquake Van Dissen et al. 2013 Distribution of displacement on single fault (A) and step-over zones (B & C)

  7. 1992 Landers Earthquake Ground Deformation Lazarte, Bray & Johnson (1994)

  8. Soil Deformation between Shear Ruptures 1906 San Francisco EQ (Lawson 1908 & Schussler 1906)

  9. Soil Effects 1992 Landers EQ E. Gath 1906 San Francisco EQ “It could be traced as a multitude of small cracks in the swampy land … then as a well-defined fissure up … to where it disappeared in the sand dunes.” (Lawson 1908)

  10. Earthquake Fault Rupture Propagation through Soil (Lade and Cole 1984)

  11. Surface Fault Rupture Damage to Homes in M6 South Napa EQ Documented 27 homes affected by surface rupture Average observed deformation: 100 to 125 mm Surface Fault Rupture Trace Key Observations: • No life safety issue resulted from surface faulting • Unreinforced concrete slabs cracked • Reinforced slabs slid uniformly or tilted • Structures on pier foundations more heavily damaged • Seismically retrofit homes/new construction performed best Damage to structure GEER Report-037 Bray et al. 2014 Cracked garage slab Rupture through piers Pushed off foundation

  12. Stiff Mat Foundation Affects Characteristics of Surface Fault Rupture Davies et al. 2007; provided by Anastapolous & Gazetas

  13. WEIGHT OF MAT FOUNDATION EFFECTS Light Load: q = 37 kPa Heavy Load: q = 91 kPa Davies et al. 2007 provided by Anastapolous & Gazetas

  14. Systems (Tied to the Ground) Damaged by Faulting

  15. Systems (Not Tied to Ground) Not Damaged by Faulting - Decoupling

  16. An Analogy POLE UNDAMAGED ROOTED TREE DAMAGED Photographs from Prof. R. Ulusay, Turkey

  17. Mitigation Strategies A. Diffuse fault offset B. Accommodate fault offset C. Divert fault offset

  18. Diffuse Underlying Fault Movement with Engineered Fill 2,500 Stiff Previously Ruptured Native Soil Moment in 2nd Floor (kN·m) 2,000 Yielding Less Ductile Engineered Fill 1,500 1,000 More Ductile Engineered Fill 500 0 0.3 0.6 0.9 Vertical Fault Displacement (m) Oettle and Bray (2013)

  19. Reinforcement Improves Fill Ductility and Diffuses Ground Movement FEA of Normal Fault Displacement (Bray et al. 1993) (Shewbridge and Sitar 1993)

  20. RESULTS OF NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS (Bray 2001) CASE 1/280 Unacceptable 7 m Soil A Rupture to Surface Excessive Differential Settlement Rock 3 cm 1/360 Acceptable B 7 m Soil with Geogrids No Surface Rupture Differential Settlement Acceptable Rock 3 cm

  21. Accommodation with Strong Structure Stronger building modifies the structural response (Oettle & Bray 2013)

  22. Effects of Foundation Strength & Stiffness 15 m deep sand deposit 70 cm reverse fault displ. (Oettle & Bray 2013) Thicker mat foundation significantly reduces building damage

  23. Accommodation with Thick Mat Foundation Thicker mat foundation “shields” structure from ground deformation Floor Beams Mat Thickness = 0.45 m Columns Mat Foundation Mat Thickness = 1.2 m Less Distortion Oettle and Bray (2013)

  24. Accommodate Ground Movement with Stiff Foundation Konagai et al. Mw6.6 Hamadoori Aftershock of 4/11/11: Shionohira Fault Displacement at Tabito Middle School 2-3otilt of building without loss of functionality

  25. Accommodate Ground Movement with Ductile Structure Laser survey (Konagai et al.) Mw6.6 Hamadoori Aftershock of 4/11/11: Shionohira Fault Displacement at Tabito Middle School 1.25 m vertical displacement of pool without cracking

  26. Anchorage Courthouse Craig Comartin, SE, with Idriss, Moriwaki, Shah et al.

  27. Anchorage Courthouse: Structural System Stiff Bay’s “Cantilever” Response Flexible Bay’s “Deformed” Response DH= 1.2 m DV= 0.8 m Craig Comartin, SE, CDComartin, Inc.

  28. Diverting Fault Offset Bank Vault Banco Central after 1972 Managua EQ (Niccum et al. 1976)

  29. Diverting Fault Offset (Shield / Protect Structure) Structure Three-story Structure Seismic Gap Soil Fault Tiebacks Normal Fault Excavation Diaphragm Wall Oettle and Bray (2013)

  30. Decoupling Structure from Underlying Ground Movements Denali Fault-Crossing (Lloyd Cluff and others; Woodward-Clyde) November 3, 2002 rupture • Horizontal: 5.5 m • Vertical: 1.1 m, N side up • Axial compression: 3.3 m “Pipeline performed as designed; and not a drop of oil was spilled” – L. Cluff Sorensen et al. (2003)

  31. California Memorial Stadium Fault Characterization AMEC Geomatrix (Wells , Swan, et al.) curb & culvert offsets culvert offset curb offset STADIUM Cleared SAHPC SAHPC Fault Trace UCB Seismic Review Committee (Bray, Sitar, Comartin, Moehle, et al.) Forell/Elsesser Engineers, Inc. (Friedman, Vignos, et al.)

  32. Design Concept PLAN VIEW Cross Section A-A’ UCB Seismic Review Committee (Bray, Sitar, Comartin, Moehle, et al.) AMEC Geomatrix (French et al.) Forell/Elsesser Engineers, Inc. (Friedman, Vignos, et al.)

  33. Modeling of the Effects of Surface Faulting Forell/Elsesser Engineers, Inc. (Friedman, Vignos, et al.) Fault

  34. CMS Fault Rupture Block Forell/Elsesser Engineers, Inc. (Friedman, Vignos, et al.)

  35. CONCLUSIONS • • Surface faulting is affected by: • • fault characteristics • • overlying soil • • foundation & structure • • Surface fault rupture can be mitigated by: • • diffusing fault offset • • accommodating fault offset • • diverting fault offset

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